Stephan: On January 21, 2010, the Supreme Court issued a ruling: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission that in effect legalized the bribery of politicians. It was the second step the Republicans carried out to end American democracy. The first step was Republican President Reagan’s tax changes, primarily the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (ERTA) and the Tax Reform Act of 1986, ostensibly aimed to stimulate the economy by cutting taxes on corporations and high-income individuals but, in fact, its purpose was the creation of an oligarch ruling class. Taken together, these two steps have created the neo-medieval culture that is the United States today. And it couldn’t be more blantant as this report makes clear.
Sergey Brin in Davos, Switzerland, on 19 January 2017. Credit: Ruben Sprich / Reuters
A Google founder has more than doubled his financial contribution to the fight against a proposed wealth tax in California. New filings with the state show that former Alphabet president Sergey Brin donated $25m to a Super Pac dedicated to blocking the tax on top of $20m he had already given.
Brin is not alone among Google’s top brass in upping his financial stake in the campaign against the ballot proposal. The company’s former CEO Eric Schmidt donated $1.02m, adding to a previous $2m contribution.
he tech titans are battling the California Billionaire Tax act, often referred to simply as the billionaire tax. It’s a proposed ballot measure that would require any California resident worth more than $1bn to pay a one-off, 5% tax on their assets to help cover education, food assistance and healthcare pr ograms in the state. It’s sponsored by the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West, and is still in the signature-gathering phase.
If the measure reaches the ballot and gains voters’ approval, […]
Wearing her signature pink headband, Rachel Accurso spoke with two children being held at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center. She described the conversations as devastating.
By Mike Hixenbaugh | NBC News • Published March 21, 2026 • nbcbayarea.com
Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty ImagesMs. Rachel on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 on TODAY.
The boy in the grainy video feed sounded desperate.
“I don’t want to be here anymore,” he said. “Nothing is good here.”
Since early March, 9-year-old Deiver Henao Jimenez had been held with his parents at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas, where children have complained of limited education, lights that never turn off and moldy food. Now he was on a video call with someone who said she wanted to help: Ms. Rachel.
“Oh, I’m so sorry,” she said in a warm, high-pitched voice familiar to millions of children and parents. “A lot of people want to try to help.”
Deiver told her he missed his friends and that the food at Dilley made his stomach hurt. But that wasn’t what worried him most. Before he was detained, he had won his school spelling bee and placed third at regionals, earning a spot at New Mexico’s state competition in May.
“I want to leave and go to the spelling bee,” he said.
“You have a real gift for spelling. You’re so smart.”
Then her smile faltered.
“It was unbelievably surreal to see this sweet little face and feel like I was on a call with somebody who’s in jail,” Ms. Rachel, whose real name is Rachel Accurso, told NBC News in an exclusive interview this week. “It broke me, and it was something I never thought I’d encounter in life.”
Deiver celebrates finishing third at a regional spelling bee in New Mexico. Las Cruces Public Schools
Like many Americans, Accurso said she first became aware of the family detention center in Dilley, Texas, in January, after federal immigration agents detained the father of 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos in Minneapolis and sent them both to the remote, prisonlike facility. A photograph of the child — wearing a blue bunny hat and a Spider-Man backpack — spread widely online, drawing national attention to the center and the treatment of families held there. They were eventually released but the family’s asylum claim was denied this week.
In the first year of its expanded immigration crackdown, the Trump administration placed more than 2,300 children into detention with their parents, with the overwhelming majority held at Dilley, according to figures provided by court-appointed monitors. Many have been held for several weeks or months.https://www.nbcnews.com/news/embedded-video/mmvo259693637593
During that time, Accurso — whose educational videos for babies and toddlers have made her one of the nation’s most recognizable kids’ entertainers — has become an increasingly prominent voice speaking out on behalf of vulnerable children. She has drawn attention to the plight of children in war-torn Gaza, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars and drawing backlash from critics who have accused her of picking sides in global conflicts.
“All these kids need to be home,” Accurso said of children held at Dilley. Nathan Congleton / TODAY
She has repeatedly defended her advocacy under a simple mantra: “I see all children as precious and equal.”
After her video call last week with Deiver and another boy held at Dilley, Accurso told NBC News she is now embarking on a new mission closer to home: working with lawyers and immigration rights activists “to close Dilley and make sure that kids and their parents are back in their communities where they belong.”
About 50 children remained at Dilley this week, down from about 500 in January, The New York Times reported Friday based on a review of government figures and advocacy group estimates. Some of the families were released in the U.S.; others were deported. It’s unclear what led to the sharp decline, but it follows months of pressure from human rights advocates, Democratic members of Congress and immigration lawyers.
Parents have complained of poor conditions at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas. Brenda Bazán
The Department of Homeland Security didn’t answer questions about the families Accurso met over video. The agency has disputed reports of poor conditions as “mainstream media lies,” saying families at Dilley are provided comprehensive care in a facility “purpose-built” for their needs.
The more Accurso read about Dilley after Liam’s detention, she said, the more unsettled she became. Then, last week, she got a chance to hear directly from children held there.
Journalist Lidia Terrazas, who has spent months reporting on conditions inside Dilley for the Spanish-language network N+ Univision, set up the video call.
Before chatting with Deiver, Accurso spoke to Gael, a 5-year-old with significant developmental delays. The boy, who is nonverbal, was in the process of being assessed for autism when he and his parents were detained in El Paso at a routine immigration check-in, according to the family’s lawyer, Elora Mukherjee. Like Deiver’s family, Gael’s parents fled Colombia, have pending asylum claims and no criminal history in the U.S., and had been working and living in the country for years before their arrests, the families’ lawyers said.
Gael, left, during a video call with Ms. Rachel; His father Leonardo, right, says his son is struggling in detention. Rachel Accurso; Courtesy Elora Mukherjee
Mukherjee, a professor at Columbia Law School and the director of its Immigrants’ Rights Clinic, said Gael has a history of severe constipation that had been managed at home with a specialized diet, including fresh fruit and soups. In detention, she said, his condition spiraled.
In a brief video interview on Friday, Gael’s parents, Nelsy and Leonardo, told NBC News their son’s condition had continued to deteriorate in detention, both physically and emotionally. They asked to be identified only by their first names, fearing retaliation should they be deported to Colombia.
“This is not a place for him because he needs special care,” Leonardo said, as Gael wandered around the bare, gray meeting room. “No human being should ever go through this.”
On Accurso’s call with her, Gael’s mother said her son had not been able to poop in nine days and was struggling to eat, gagging when he tried. The facility had been treating him with laxatives and later an enema, but his condition hadn’t significantly improved, his mother said. His stomach was visibly distended, Accurso said, leaving her “incredibly worried.”
“Imagine if your child hadn’t pooped in nine days,” she said. “This is not normal. This is an important medical situation.”
As his mother spoke, Accurso slipped into character and tried to engage him — singing “Wheels on the Bus,” holding up a toy and talking to him about his love of trains — but he appeared restless and overwhelmed, she said.
Ms. Rachel tries to cheer up Gael during their call. Rachel Accurso
Amid his confusion and discomfort, Gael has grown increasingly distressed at Dilley, Mukherjee said, at times hitting himself — behavior his parents had not previously seen.
“Treating a child this way is a crime,” Accurso told NBC News. “It’s neglect and child abuse.”
Accurso said she was no less concerned about Deiver.
In their brief conversation, he moved quickly past the conditions inside the facility to what he was missing outside it — his classmates, his gifted and talented courses and, most of all, the spelling bee he had been preparing for.
“He’s so proud,” Accurso said.
The juxtaposition, she said, was difficult to process: a child talking about his love of pizza and school one moment, then asking for help getting out of a federal detention center the next.
“We’re trying to get a child out of a jail to do a spelling bee,” she said. “I just never thought those words would go together.”
Deiver and his parents have been held at Dilley since early March. Corey Sullivan Martin
Accurso recalled winning her own second-grade classroom spelling bee with a lucky guess on the word “chocolate” — a small, long-ago victory she still remembers in vivid detail.
Moments like that are more than milestones, said Accurso, who has master’s degrees in music education and early childhood development. They shape how children see themselves — their confidence, their sense of belonging, their sense of what comes next.
Taking those kinds of opportunities away from a child, she said, “is cruelty.”
After speaking with the children, Accurso said she initially hesitated to speak out publicly.
Her advocacy for children in Gaza had led to a torrent of criticism from right-wing groups that accused her of antisemitism for centering Palestinian children rather than Israelis. Accurso has pushed back on those claims, noting that she advocates for children suffering on both sides of the conflict. The controversy has led to threats against her family, she said, and she worried that speaking out about ICE detention might inflame the situation.
But she kept coming back to the example set by Fred Rogers, the late children’s television icon she considers her hero, who used his platform to speak out on behalf of children.
“I’m kind of in shock right now about the level of cruelty,” Accurso said of Dilley during a video call with NBC News. Matt Nighswander / NBC News
Ultimately, she said, the decision felt clear.
And unlike in the past, when she painstakingly sought to frame her activism as apolitical, Accurso said she is ready to embrace the label.
“I am political,” she said. “It’s political to believe that children are worthy of love and care, and that every child is equal, and that our care shouldn’t stop at what we look like, our family, at our religion, at a border.”
If being political is what it takes to bring Gael home, or to get Deiver to his spelling bee, Accurso said, then her conscience leaves her no other choice.
Journalist Rida Ali charts the history of US intervention in Iran from 1953 to the current attack in this video explainer. Watch video and Read on Substack
On February 28, the political landscape of the Middle East shifted dramatically following a reported US airstrike that killed Ayatollah Khamenei. But 2026 is far from the first time the US has been involved in Iranian politics.
Many of the sentiments and strategies we see today echo actions from over 70 years ago in 1953, when a democratically elected leader was overthrown after attempting to nationalize Iran’s oil. For many Iranians, this moment feels like part of a much longer pattern of Western intervention shaping the country’s trajectory. If you think you know the story, let’s take a closer look at how the past and present are deeply connected.
Then, invite three of your friends to join you. We need your help bringing new folks into the movement! Forward this email to three friends or use our social media toolkit to spread the word.
Finally, check out the new No Kings online merch store!* This is the best way to find gear for next Saturday! Indivisible does not operate the store, so we can’t guarantee all items will arrive to all parts of the country by next Saturday, but there’s a good chance items ordered today will arrive in time.
Together, we’re going to make sure March 28 is massive, peaceful, joyful, and historic. We’ll remind the regime and its enablers that the real power resides with the people. We’ll give hope and courage to our fellow Americans who are still looking for ways to turn their anger and disapproval into active resistance.
Johnny Cash Aug 29, 2019 Official video for “The Ballad of Ira Hayes” by Johnny Cash Listen to Johnny Cash: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/listenYD Subscribe to the official Johnny Cash YouTube channel: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/subscribeYD Johnny Cash was a legendary country music singer, songwriter and musician. Born on February 26, 1932 in Kingsland, Arkansas, Johnny made his way up to be one of the most influential artists of all time. His genre-spanning music embraced country, rock and roll, rockabilly, blues, folk, and gospel sounds with top hits such as “Ring of Fire,” “Walk the Line,” and “Folsom Prison Blues.” Honored with multiple Grammy awards throughout his lifetime, Johnny was also inducted into both the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the Country Music Hall of Fame. He often collaborated with other popular music icons, such as Bob Dylan, Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson, to name a few. Throughout his storied career, Johnny received numerous accolades and left an indelible impact on the genre of country music. He is revered and remembered to this day as an incomparable legend of the music industry. Watch more of Johnny Cash’s music videos: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/listenYC Follow Johnny Cash: Facebook: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/_followFI Instagram: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/_followII Twitter: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/_followTI Website: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/_followWI Spotify: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/_followSI YouTube: https://JohnnyCash.lnk.to/subscribeYD#JohnnyCash#TheBalladofIraHayes#officialvideo [Chorus:] Ira Hayes Ira Hayes Call him drunken Ira Hayes He won’t answer anymore Not the whiskey drinking Indian Or the marine that went to war
Republicans claim that Americans support legislation that, under the guise of addressing the non-existent problem of noncitizens voting, would make voting more difficult for millions of lawful voters. A new poll now shows that this claim is false.
As the Senate is considering the Republican voter suppression bill that is Donald Trump’s top legislative priority, GOP lawmakers keep claiming that Americans support the measure. However, a new poll shows that this is categorically false.
While it is true that a large majority of Americans want voters to present a photo ID before casting their ballot, a mere 28 percent of them say they favor passage of the deceptively named “SAVE America Act.” Thirty-one percent of them oppose it and the rest are not sure.
You wouldn’t know that from listening to Trump or any other Republican.
“THE SAVE AMERICA ACT is by far the most popular Bill of its kind ever put before Congress!” the president wrote last week.
It’s a statement that the GOP proponents of the legislation have repeated in some form for months. However, as the poll shows, it’s simply not true.
And not only that. The 80-20 support for voter ID does not reflect what’s in the bill. That’s because the measure requires voters to present identification that shows they are US citizens, which is something two-thirds of respondents approve of.
While it is true that 90 percent of respondents felt that a passport, which only about half of them own, would be an acceptable form of ID, even more of them (95 percent) believe that a driver’s license or other state-issued type of identification should be sufficient.
However, if the SAVE America Act were to be signed into law, most driver’s licenses would not qualify because they do not show whether the holder is an American citizen.
That’s not all. Trump wants to use the bill as a vehicle for banning most types of voting by mail. However, about half of all Americans think this option to cast their ballots should be available to everybody while another 39 percent believe it should only be available to people who are away or physically unable to vote.
In addition to showing that Republicans are misrepresenting their bill and how much public support it has, the poll also reveals some very troubling trends.
Trump’s Big Lie and his efforts to undermine faith in US democracy are having an effect.
Even though the president or the Republicans who are parroting him have never presented evidence supporting their lies, almost one-third of Americans (and more than half of GOP voters) believe that there is “widespread voter fraud and irregularities” in US elections.
And, although even conservative groups like the Heritage Foundation have found that it is exceedingly rare for noncitizens to vote, 23 percent of respondents (and nearly half of Trump supporters) think this happens “a lot.”
What is also troubling is that Democrats didn’t commission a poll like this a long time ago since it was clear what it would show: It would have countered a main (and incorrect) talking point that Republicans have been trotting out for months.
In addition, Democrats could (and should) have been more proactive in rolling out their own version of an election integrity bill – one that protects the elections while eliminating the many barriers Republicans are trying to put up that make voting more difficult.
For example, the poll shows that two-thirds of Americans support a proof of citizenship requirement. That is sensible. However, to work, it must be easy to provide that proof so as not to disenfranchise eligible voters. People realize that this is a concern. Twenty-nine percent of them stated that such a requirement would prevent eligible US citizens from voting.
The easiest way to address that problem would be to automatically register Americans at birth or as part of their naturalization process.
This is something that should be broadly popular and eliminate concerns about noncitizens voting. It would also demonstrate that Republicans oppose such a measure because they have been coming up with various ways for years to pick who gets to vote.
As it is, Democrats are not doing enough to fight back. While it is easier to spread a lie than to combat it, they have to do more to restore faith in democracy and counteract Trump’s efforts to rig the midterms.
Klaus MarreKlaus Marre, a former congressional reporter, is a senior editor for US politics at WhoWhatWhy. He writes regularly here, and you can also follow him on Bluesky and Substack.
We will gather at 11:30 AM at Embarcadero Plaza, with overflow to Sue Bierman Park.
At 12:00 noon, we will march up Market St. and McAllister St. to Civic Center Plaza.
At 2 PM, the rally at Civic Center Plaza will start. There will also be a resistance tabling fair at the neighboring Fulton Plaza.
Please join us and spread the word so that we can have the biggest, most powerful march yet.
Join us for a March from Embarcadero Plaza to Civic Center Plaza, with a rally and resistance fair to follow. We will come together to promote ways to stand strong against the Trump and MAGA regime, protect our communities from ICE, and get ready for a Blue Wave in 2026.
What began in 2025 as a single day of defiance has become a sustained national resistance to tyranny, spreading from small towns to city centers and across every community determined to defend democracy. Our peaceful movement is bigger than ever.
When our families are under attack and costs are pushing people to the brink, silence is not an option. We will defend ourselves and our communities against this administration’s unjust and cruel acts of violence.
On March 28th, rise up, take to the streets, and say it loud: no thrones, no crowns, no kings. We’re not watching history happen—we’re making it. Join us.
A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events.Read more
Accessibility
This event meets ADA standards
Accessible restrooms
Mainly flat ground
No stairs or steps
ASL interpretation
Wheelchair ramp
Have accessibility questions? Reply to your registration email to confirm your requirements or request more information.
We have the power and are claiming it together. No Thrones. No Crowns. No Kings.
What began in 2025 as a single day of defiance has become a sustained national resistance to tyranny, spreading from small towns to city centers and across every community determined to defend democracy. Our peaceful movement is bigger than ever.
When our families are under attack and costs are pushing people to the brink, silence is not an option. We will defend ourselves and our communities against this administration’s unjust and cruel acts of violence.
On March 28th, rise up, take to the streets, and say it loud: no thrones, no crowns, no kings. We’re not watching history happen—we’re making it. Join us.
A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events.
Join peaceful people from San Francisco Bay communities and all walks of life for a family-friendly, inclusive and peaceful event on March 28th where we will create a new work of human art together on Ocean Beach. We have more power than we know!
The exact design for this banner is still being developed, and the message’s theme (always subject to last-minute changes) will be announced closer to the event.
When: Saturday, March 28th – Arrive by 11:30 am Location: Ocean Beach, SF – Stairwell 17
Directly across from the Beach Chalet — 1000 Great Highway, SF, CA, 94121 — closest intersection is Fulton and Great Highway.
Please Plan to Arrive at the Beach by 11:30 am – This will ensure we are all in place for photography by our drone crews at NOON SHARP. The event will wrap up by about 1:00 pm.
PLEASE REMEMBER TO REGISTER – Knowing how many people will attend really helps us with the banner design calculations. THANK YOU!
Labor and community organizers are aiming high. Some business groups are expected to campaign against a wage hike. Voter approval would be required in November.
Zach Norris, co-executive director of the Black Organizing Project, said Oakland’s minimum wage needs to increase to help working families. Credit: Eli Wolfe/The Oaklandside.
With the cost of living continuing to soar across the Bay Area, a coalition in Alameda County is trying to persuade residents to mandate higher wages for the workers who struggle most.
The Living Wage for All campaign announced Thursday at Understory Oakland in Fruitvale that they are collecting signatures to put two measures on the ballot in Oakland and Alameda County in November.
The measures would require businesses with more than 100 employees and more than $1 million in revenue to increase the minimum wage to $30 by 2030. Smaller businesses would have until 2035 and 2037 to apply those wages. The county initiative would apply to unincorporated parts of the county.
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Oakland voters established a citywide minimum wage in 2014 by passing Measure FF, which also required employers to provide workers with sick leave. Under Measure FF, the city’s minimum was is currently $17.34, although there are certain exceptions to this rule: some hotel workers in the city make a slightly higher wage, thanks to Measure Z, and state law now requires some fast food workers to make $20 an hour. Oakland voters established the hotel minimum wage law in 2018, which also led to the creation of the city’s Department of Workplace and Employment Standards.
“In that gap is human suffering,” Norris said at the press conference, citing examples of Black people being pushed out of the Bay Area, teachers sleeping in cars, women suffering through sexual harassment in restaurants to maintain an income.
Miriam Medellín Myers, lead organizer for Trabajadores Unidos Workers United, which supports migrant low-wage workers, said the Oakland members of her group are paid the lowest minimum wage in the entire Bay Area, forcing many to work multiple jobs.
“Our members are unhoused or housing insecure simply because the wages aren’t high enough,” she said. “$30 an hour does not fully meet the cost of living for our families, but we believe that it’s the start of a better future for working class families.”
Who’s behind the campaign to raise Oakland’s minimum wage?
One of the organizations behind the campaign is One Fair Wage, a national group that previously fought to increase the minimum wage to $15. That hourly target has been eclipsed by years of rising inflation, which has led to an affordability crisis for many workers, according to Saru Jayaraman, the president of One Fair Wage.
According to Jayaraman, one person in a two-parent two-child household in the Bay Area needs at least $44 an hour to support themselves and their family. Last year, her organization helped launch a campaign called “A Living Wage For All,” which effectively replaced the longstanding effort to increase the minimum wage to $15. The new campaign’s objective is to increase the minimum wage to $25 across the country, and $30 in areas like Oakland where the cost of living is especially high. Similar campaigns have been building in New York and Los Angeles.
“Alameda County is not alone, but Alameda County is going to be the first to pass a living wage for all in the country,” Jayaraman said.
To get employers on board, Jayaraman said organizers have been meeting with small businesses to learn what it would take to help them meet a new higher minimum wage. Some potential solutions have included tax credits, support with workers compensation, and help with technical issues.
“It can be done without businesses closing,” she said. “We’re here to tell you, we’ve done the economic analysis, we’ve met with the small businesses, we’ve created the supports to make sure they can get there.”
Organizers claim there is strong support for these initiatives. Jayaraman said polling done by Lake Research Partners shows that more than 70% of Alameda County voters support gradually raising the minimum wage to $30 an hour.
Kavitha Iyengar, a representative for United Auto Workers Region 6, said the campaign is preparing for a fight, noting that “businesses and forces from outside Oakland and Alameda County are going to unite to try to beat us.”
Greg Hodge, president of the Brotherhood of Elders Network, noted that the push to increase minimum wages dates back to at least the Poor People’s Campaign, a 1968 effort organized by Martin Luther King Jr. to demand living wages for people, and was part of the Black Panther Party’s 10 point program.
“This is for our children, this is for generations who are not yet born, because we know a living wage creates wealth,” Hodge said. “A living wage for all, if we do this properly, pushes back on the 1%, pushes back on the billionaire class.”
Eli Wolfe reports on City Hall for The Oaklandside. He was previously a senior reporter for San José Spotlight, where he had a beat covering Santa Clara County’s government and transportation. He also worked as an investigative reporter for the Pasadena-based newsroom FairWarning, where he covered labor, consumer protection and transportation issues. He started his journalism career as a freelancer based out of Berkeley. Eli’s stories have appeared in The Atlantic, NBCNews.com, Salon, the San Francisco Chronicle, and elsewhere. Eli graduated from UC Santa Cruz and grew up in San Francisco.More by Eli Wolfe
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We protest Heritage Foundation EVERY MONDAY (Join us!!!!) By admin | September 2, 2025 | Uncategorized Cliff Cash Comedy Premiered Jul 26, 2025 Every Monday at The Heritage Foundation 214 Massachusetts Ave. Washington D.C. 4pm protest 6pm pizza Every Friday at Fox News D.C. 400 N. Capitol St. Washington D.C. 4pm protest 6pm pizza We are... Continue reading →
Milk Club Trans Caucus Meeting Date: Tuesday, April 28 Time: 5-7 PM Location and Zoom Link: Meeting info available to members of the Milk Club Trans Caucus. Please reach out to trans@milkclub.org if you would like to join the Milk Club Trans Caucus.
San Francisco Young Democrats meet with SFDems Chair Nancy Tung Wednesday, April 29th | 2pm Location: SC T-160 (third floor of Student Center) Register The San Francisco Young Democrats at SF State are teaming up with SFDems to make sure their voices are heard. Want to get more plugged into San Francisco... Continue reading →
One Million Rising: Strategic Non-Cooperation to Fight Authoritarianism Virtual Event · Hosted by No Kings Time Wednesdays 8 – 9:30pm EDT Location Virtual event Join from anywhere About this event Across the country, authoritarian forces are getting bolder and more dangerous. Trump and his allies are not hiding their agenda: mass deportations,... Continue reading →
THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 2023 AT 2 AM – 4 AM PDT How to create trust in a group? Details Event by Extinction Rebellion Empathy Circles online EMPATHY CAFE Duration: 2 hr Public · Anyone on or off Facebook How to create trust in a group? This is the question that arose in our... Continue reading →